The truth about ADHD - you are here for a reason, Anons!
(media.greatawakening.win)
FIFTH GEN WARFARE
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (115)
sorted by:
I don't have ADHD. I have Asperger's. I can focus on one thing as long as it takes. I have a couple of subjects that I know way more about than the average person. I can remember anything I want to. I can ingest tons of information, and my brain can sort through it all and come to correct conclusions.
On the other hand, I can't read people and I can't see from their point of view. I absolutely cannot "feel your pain" like Clinton claimed. I can't tell if they're bored, and I should stop talking.
On the chans, the anons similar to me are what is termed "weaponized autism." We're the ones who can take a random photograph and figure out the GPS coordinates based on what can be seen in the photo. We can go through tens of thousands of pages of material and find what's immediately relevant.
I always thought ADHD was just a way to get drugs into kids who hate to stay in their chairs at school. Because of drug use and perhaps stuff in our food, these things, as well as allergies, are very common today. When I was in 1st grade, there was one boy that had trouble staying seated. He was the only in the entire school. Also, I never knew a single kid in school that had any food allergies. We all ate in the cafeteria, and everyone ate the same food.
I get overloaded by sensory inputs. It took me a while to get used to the noise and talking at family reunions. I became the expert that people wanted to talk to, so I could talk to someone and shut out everything else.
I believe I could function in an emergency, as blood doesn't bother me as long as it isn't mine. :)
I have a low "give a shit" factor, so a lot of things don't bother me.
I wish people in the 50s and 60s in education had known about Asperger's so I could have gotten help.
Are we long lost twins? This perfectly describes me lmao
I am 70, got tired of micromanaging idiots 20 years ago, and "retired." I never got a super job, as I can't do office politics. So I became almost "indispensable" at my various jobs.
Even at 70, I can still learn and remember anything I want to. The latest thing I'm looking into is AI and how to have a private standalone AI model running on my own server not connected to the internet, so no one knows what I'm doing with it. I have terabytes of data to work with, so there may be a turnkey program available online for free before I get all the data ready for software parsing.
Check out: https://www.reddit.com/r/LocalLLaMA/
I just started reading it. One poster mentions training an AI on his personal diary.
That's one of the data sources I have. I have a big ass notebook with entries for every single day since I was born 70 years ago. In the earlier days, most entries only list the weather data (high, low, precipitation, unusual winds, and storms). Some list historical events and other events I found interesting. After around 1970, it gets very detailed. I have work days, trips, meals, even gas logs. I have all computer activity logged since my first PC in 1989, including emails, file downloads, and all documents and other files I have created.
On a private system, I could ask the price of gas on a certain day, and the AI could look in my data and tell me what I was paying then. Or what I was doing on a certain day. It would be a big help, as I have no wish to stick everything in my own head. Some have said that your brain is for processing, not storage.
In addition, I have tens of thousands of reference books on my computer that I would eventually want my personal AI to search for me. I'm a genealogist, so AI could help me do research faster. Right now I'm limited by how fast I can type information from various online databases and my collection of books.
Thanks for the link.